Avoidance of colored impurities in the preparation of ultrahigh molecular weight ethylene polymers by means of a titanium-containing catalyst system

ABSTRACT

Ultrahigh molecular weight ethylene polymers are prepared in the gas phase in a thoroughly mixed bed of finely divided polymer by continuous introduction of the monomer into a polymerization system at 60°-120° C. and 5-60 bar in the presence of a reaction product of a titanium-containing catalyst and an antistat.

The present invention relates to a process for preparing an ultrahigh molecular weight ethylene polymer by homopolymerization of ethylene or by copolymerization of ethylene with a compound copolymerizable therewith by continuously feeding the monomer into a polymerization system at 60-125° C. and 5-70 bar, conducting the polymerization in the presence of a titanium-containing catalyst and an antistat and in the presence or absence of a molecular weight regulator in the gas phase in a thoroughly mixed bed of finely divided polymer having an average particle diameter of equal to or less than 1 mm with removal of the heat of polymerization by cooling the ethylene cycle gas, and discharging the polymer from the polmerization system.

With such processes it is possible to obtain homopolymers and copolymers of ethylene having densities of from 0.915 to 0.955 g/cm³ and average molecular weights of equal to or greater than 1×10⁶, the absence of a solvent or a suspension medium and high pressure making it very simple to isolate the polymer.

Processes for preparing ethylene polymers in the gas phase in a thoroughly mixed dry bed of finely divided polymer with removal of the heat of polymerization by cooling the recirculated ethylene are known from the literature (cf. Ullmanns Encyklopadie der technischen Chemie 4, [1980], [19], page 186, Verlag Chemie GmbH, D-6940 Weinheim, U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,012,573, 4,427,573, 4,376,191 and 4,467,080, EP-A-0,110,087, EP-A-0,050,013, EP-A-0,050,477 and EP-A-0,059,080 and in particular EP-A-0,230,019 and EP-A-0,260,647).

Existing processes involve the use of titanium-containing catalysts or Phillips catalysts and hydrogen as molecular weight regulator. The reactor may consist for example of a gas inlet zone, a cylindrical reaction zone and a settling zone, where the polymer particles are separated from unconverted gas. The diameter of such a known reactor is 4.5 m at the polymerization zone (cf. Chemical Engineering 80 (1973), 72-73).

However, the important requirement with this polyethylene process, which takes place close to the sintering temperature of polyethylene, is to ensure constant reaction conditions and constant mixing conditions. Despite a large number of gradual improvements it has been found again and again that deposits are formed on the reactor walls and internal fitments and that polymer clumps are obtained. This makes it impossible to maintain constant reaction conditions.

The consequences are fluctuating product quality and short reactor runs followed by complicated reactor cleaning campaigns.

It is already known from the literature to add an antistat to the polymerization system to avoid caking in the polarization of olefins in the liquid phase, or at liquid-like densities and solution properties of supercritical ethylene, and in the suspension polymerization of ethylene (cf. EP-A1-107,127, U.S. Pat. No. 4,220,580 and Chemical Abstracts 83 [1976 ], 116 444, and 94 [1981], 16340). In these known processes, charges formed on suspended polymer or catalyst particles can flow off toward the wall, and in the case of the high-pressure polymerization it is possible to control the reaction and to improve the properties of the low density polyethylene.

EP-A-0,232,701 has already disclosed a process for preparing ultrahigh molecular weight ethylene polymers by polymerization of ethylene in a polymerization system at 60-125° C. and 5-70 bar, wherein the polymerization is carried out in the presence of a catalyst and an antistat in the gas phase in a thoroughly mixed bed of finely divided polymer having an average particle size of less than or equal to 1 mm with removal of the heat of polymerization by cooling the ethylene cycle gas, the antistat being preferably added to the bed before the start of and during the polymerization.

If this process is used to prepare ultrahigh molecular weight polyethylene with a titanium-containing coagulation catalyst, for example as described in EP-A-0,230,019 and EP-A-0,260,647, the presence of an antistat leads to black impurities in the product, and the polymer has a very low bulk density.

It is an object of the present invention to prevent the formation of polymer clumps and the fouling of reactor walls and internal fitments in the gas phase polymerization of ethylene and to ensure satisfactory flow of the reaction and recycled gas through the thoroughly mixed bed of particularly finely divided polymer while at the same time improving the product quality of the ultrahigh molecular weight ethylene polymer in respect of black impurities and in the direction of higher bulk density.

We have found that this object is achieved by a process wherein the antistat, before introduction into the polymerization system, is reacted in amounts of from 5 to 1000% by weight, based on the catalyst component, with the catalyst and the resulting reaction product is added to the bed from above.

Preferably, the antistat is reacted with the catalyst by mixing at from 0 to 50° C. in small amounts of an inert organic solvent, preferably a hydrocarbon, advantageously an acyclic hydrocarbon, in particular paraffin oil or heptane.

Preferably, the antistat is a chromium salt of an alkylsalicylic acid advantageously having an alkyl group of from 14 to 18 carbon atoms, a chromium salt of a C₁ -C₁₈ -alkylanthranilic acid, in particular stearylanthranilic acid, a calcium salt of a sulfo-containing diester of an alkanedicarboxylic acid of from 4 to 6 carbon atoms and alcohols of from 4 to 20, in particular from 8 to 12, carbon atoms, advantageously a sulfosuccinic ester, in particular dioctyl or didecyl succinate, a calcium salt of Medialan acid, or a mixture thereof.

In particular, the antistat is reacted with the catalyst in amounts of from 50 to 500% by weight.

Preferably, the antistat is reacted with the catalyst by mixing at from 25 to 35° C. in small amounts of an organic solvent. We have found that the object is also achieved by an ultrahigh molecular weight ethylene polymer obtainable as claimed in claim 1 or 2 or 3 or 4 or 5 or 6.

Ultrahigh molecular weight ethylene polymers for the purposes of the present invention are polyethylene, and copolymers of ethylene with -monoolefins preparable with ethylene under the stated conditions, whose molecular weight exceeds 1×10⁶. Preferably, the ethylene polymers have a molecular weight of from 3×10⁶ to 6×10⁶, where the molecular weight is the viscosity average determined according to Mark-Houwink at 135° C. in decalin. Ultrahigh molecular weight ethylene polymers are known per se.

Suitable comonomers for ethylene are in particular n-1-butene, n-1-hexene, 4-methyl-1-pentene and propene. The ethylene polymers obtained have densities of from 0.910 to 0.940 g/cm³, measured by German Standard Specification DIN 53479. The ethylene polymers are obtained in finely divided form as a fine or coarse grit having a particle diameter in general from about 0.03 to 1, in particular from about 0.1 to 1, mm.

In the polymerization, the monomer is introduced as mentioned in the references cited at the beginning into a polymerization system at 60-125° C., preferably 80-110° C., and 5-70, preferably 20-50, bar in a continuous manner (cf. in particular EP-A-0,230019, EP-A-0,260,647 and EP-A-0,232,701).

The polymerization itself is effected by means of a titanium-containing catalyst and an aluminum-containing catalyst component. Such catalyst systems are so familiar to the skilled worker from theory and practice as to require no further explanation here. See instead in particular EP-A0,230,019 and EP-A-0,260,647. Such catalysts and the use thereof in the polymerization of ethylene in the gas phase are known from the above literature, so that there is no need to go into any details here. The catalysts are customarily employed in amounts of from 0.001 to 0.05 % by weight, based on the prepared polymer. To prepare ultrahigh molecular weight necessary for the average diameter of the catalyst particles not to exceed 20 μm.

The above remarks concerning the catalyst system apply mutatis mutandis also to any molecular weight regulators used in addition, in particular hydrogen.

The ethylene homopolymerization or copolymerization is to be carried out in conventional manner in the gas phase in a thoroughly mixed dry bed of finely divided polymer. Polymerization in the gas phase means that neither solvent nor suspension medium is present for monomers or polymers in the polymerization zone and that no supercritical ethylene having liquid-like densities and solution properties is present. A thoroughly mixed bed encompasses both a stirred bed and a fluidized bed. The process in a stirred bed is based essentially on the process described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,254,070 and 3,350,376 and British Patent 1,552,438. A particularly preferred process is described in EP-A-0,110,087, wherein the heat of polymerization is removed by Joule-Thomson cooling by introducing a monomer mixture at a higher pressure than the polymerization pressure and at a colder temperature than the polymerization temperature into the polymerization zone in an excess amount in such a way that the resulting Joule-Thomson cooling maintains the desired polymerization temperature and the gaseous amount of monomer mixture not consumed by polymerization is withdrawn from the polymerization zone and, after compression and cooling, recycled back into the polymerization zone. The process in a fluidized bed is likewise so well known as to require no further explanation here (cf. EP-B1-0,004,966 and EP-Al-0,089,691).

The heat of polymerization is removed by cooling the monomer cycle gas. This cooling can be effected by means of customary heat exchangers (cf. for example US-A-4,012,573) or by evaporative cooling (cf. EP-A1-0,110,087).

The polymer is customarily discharged from the polymerization zone through depressurization valves, which are opened periodically.

In the process according to the invention, the antistat, before introduction into the polymerization system, is to be reacted in amounts of from 5 to 1000, preferably 50-500, % by weight, based on the catalyst component, with the catalyst, preferably by mixing and contacting at from 0 to 50° C., in particular at from 25 to 35° C., preferably in an organic solvent, in particular in a higher-boiling paraffin oil or in hexane, and the reaction product formed is to be added to the bed from above. The organic solvent is preferably present in amounts of from 100 to 2000 % by weight, based on the catalyst component.

Antistats are additives of various compositions, which prevent electrostatic charge buildup. Suitable antistats are a chromium salt of an alkylsalicylic acid having an alkyl group of from 14 to 18 carbon atoms, a chromium salt of stearylanthranilic acid, a calcium salt of a sulfo-containing dioctyl or didecyl succinate, a calcium salt of Medialan acid or a mixture thereof. Antistats for ethylene polymers are reviewed in by G. Balbach in Kunststoffe 67 (1977), 154-159, and in EP-A1-0,107,127, pages 6 to 10.

A particularly suitable antistatic substance is a product from BASF AG under the tradename KEROSTAT® 5009, which is a mixture of chromium stearylanthranilate, calcium medialanate and ditert-butylphenol, and a product from Shell AG under the tradename ASA 3, which contains a chromium alkyl salicylate and a calcium salt of a dialkyl sulfosuccinate.

In a particularly preferred procedure, the reaction of the catalyst component with the antistat carried out by suspending the catalyst in paraffin oil, for example ONDINA® 15 from Shell AG, in a weight ratio of 1:5 in a stirred vessel in the absence of oxygen and reacting the resulting 40 % strength by weight solution of ASA 3 in ONDINA® 15 for an hour, the weight ratio of catalyst:ASA 3 being 1:1.7. The catalyst suspension obtained from the reaction can be used as such or in a dilute or more concentrated form. It is similarly possible to free the catalyst from the suspension medium and to meter it into the reactor as a dry solid.

The advantages obtained with the invention over the process described in EP-A-0,232,701 are not only that the formation of adherent and/or detached polymer deposits or clumps of a certain size is avoided, the reactor conditions can be made constant and reproducible and the obtainable reactor runs are likewise very long but also that uniformly high product quality is ensured in respect of the avoidance of black impurities and the attainment of a high bulk density.

EXAMPLE

83 parts by weight of a Ziegler catalyst having a titanium content of 2.3% by weight, as described in EP-A-0,230,019,are suspended in 440 parts by weight of ONDINA® 15 and reacted at 30° C. with 140 parts by weight of ASA 3 in 200 parts by weight of ONDINA® 15 in a stirred reactor under N₂ for one hour.

62 g of the resulting catalyst suspension (corresponding to 6 g of solid catalyst) and 14 g of tri-i-butylaluminum as cocatalyst per hour are fed from above into a 1.5 m³ reactor holding a pulverulent bed comprising 350 kg of polyethylene granules stirred at 80 revolutions per minute. The reactor is continuously supplied with ethylene at 40 bar. The reaction temperature is 90° C. It is maintained by withdrawing unconverted hot ethylene from the reactor, cooling it down, compressing it and, after depressurization to reactor pressure, reintroducing it cold back into the reaction zone.

Per hour the reactor discharges 65 kg of polyethylene having a molecular weight of about 6×10⁶ and consumed cycle gas is replaced by fresh ethylene.

Obtained without clumping or fouling in the reactor, the product has a viscosity number [η] (as per German Standard Specification DIN 53 728) of 33±1 dl/g and a polymer density (as per German Standard Specification DIN 53 479) of 0.930 g/cm³. The bulk density of the polymer as defined by German Standard Specification DIN 53 468 is 440 g/l. In accordance with German Standard Specification DIN 58 834, eight black foreign particles can be seen as impurities in 300 g of polyethylene.

COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE A

The Example is repeated, except that the catalyst prepared according to EP-A-0,230,019 is not reacted with the antistat before introduction into the reactor, but that the same amounts of antistat ASA 3 are added separately to the reactor.

Obtained without clumping and fouling in the reactor at a rate of 63 kg per hour, the polyethylene obtained has a viscosity number [η] (as per German Standard Specification DIN 53 728) of 34±1 dl/g and a polymer density (as per German Standard Specification DIN 53 479) of 0.929 g/cm³. The bulk density of the polymer is 330 g/l (German Standard Specification DIN 53 468). Assessed as per German Standard Specification DIN 58 834, 70 black foreign particles can be seen as impurities in 300 g of polyethylene.

COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE B

The Example is repeated, except that the catalyst prepared according to EPA-0,230,019 is not reacted with the antistat before introduction into the reactor but that, in accordance with EP-A-0,232,701, 100 ml of a 10% strength by weight solution of ASA 3 in paraffin oil per hour are metered in starting two hours before the first catalyst is metered in.

Obtained without clumping or fouling in the reactor at a rate of 70 kg per hour, the polyethylene has a viscosity number [η] (as per German Standard Specification DIN 53 728) of 33±1 dl/g and a polymer density (as per German Standard Specification DIN 53 479) of 0.930 g/cm³. The bulk density of the polymer is 340 g/l (German Standard Specification DIN 53 468). Assessed as per German Standard Specification DIN 53 834, 220 dark foreign particles can be seen as impurities in 300 g of polyethylene. 

We claim:
 1. A method for avoiding colored impurities in and increasing the bulk density of ultrahigh molecular weight ethylene homo- or copolymers prepared by homopolymerizing ethylene or copolymerizing ethylene and at least one compound copolymerixable therewith by continuously feeding the monomer(s) into a polymerization system at a temperature of from 60 to 125° C. and a pressure of from 5 to 70 bar, conducting the polymerization in the presence of a titanium-containing catalyst and a chromium or calcium containing antistat and in the presence or absence of a molecular weight regulator in the gas phase in a thoroughly mixed dry bed of finely divided polymer having an average particle size of equal or less than 1 mm with removal of the heat of polymerization by cooling the ethylene cycle gas, and discharging the polymer from the polymerization system, the said method comprising the steps of(i) reacting the calcium or chromium containing antistat, before introduction into the polymerization system, in amounts of from 5 to 1000% by weight, based on the catalyst component, with the catalyst and (ii) adding the resulting reaction product to the said bed of finely divided polymer from above.
 2. A process as defined in claim 1, wherein the antistat is reacted with the catalyst by mixing at from 0 to 50° C. in small amounts of an inert organic solvent.
 3. A process as defined in claim 1, wherein the antistat is reacted with the catalyst by mixing at from 0 to 50° C. in small amounts, of paraffin oil or heptane.
 4. A process as defined in claim 1, wherein the antistat is a chromium salt of an alkylsalicylic acid having an alkyl group of from 14 to 18 carbon atoms, a chromium salt of stearylanthranilic acid, a calcium salt of a sulfo-containing dioctyl or didecyl succinate, a calcium salt of Medialan acid, or a mixture thereof.
 5. A process as defined in claim 8, wherein the antistat is reacted with the catalyst in amounts of from 50 to 500% by weight.
 6. A process as defined in claim 1, wherein the antistat is reacted with the catalyst by mixing at from 25 to 35° C. in small amounts of an organic solvent. 